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Daily Shig (Blog)

Air Resources Board May Assume OPR's Duties

The California Air Resources Board will take over many duties of the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research (OPR) by the first of the year.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

To Truly Reduce Driving, California Should Imitate Portland

At the risk of repeating what I and about a million other people have already said I’ll say it again: California could learn a lot from Portland when it comes to transit and its climate-related benefits.

In the Portland metro area, transit is efficient and relatively inexpensive for riders. In the Bay Area, the most transit-rich region in California, 28 different providers don’t add up to an efficient “system,” and transit operators are raising already high fares.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

'You Call That Infill?' – The Problems With An All-Infill Plan

One person’s infill is another person’s environmental disaster.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

Shall We Comply With SB 375 Or Drive Less Instead?

It seems to me that, like so many other policy initiatives, this whole SB 375 thing can either be a bureaucratic nightmare or a useful way to move forward. We can devote an enormous amount of time and attention to figuring out how to comply with the law ... or we can figure out how to drive less.

» read more | Bill Fulton's blog

An All-Infill Plan For The Bay Area's Growth

The Bay Area can accommodate the next 25 years' worth of growth – 2 million additional people and 1.7 million new jobs – entirely through infill development, according to Greenbelt Alliance. The San Francisco-based advocacy group unveiled the all-infill strategy in a plan called “Grow Smart Bay Area” on Wednesday, June 10.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

Governor Calls OPR ‘A Total Waste’

The future of the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research appears very much in doubt. On Wednesday, the Legislature’s Conference Committee on the Budget recommended eliminating OPR only hours after Gov. Schwarzenegger called OPR “a total waste.”

The Los Angeles Times quotes the governor saying, "The Office of Planning and Research ought to be about planning and research to come up with great policy answers, which this office doesn't do.”
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

SB 375 Advisory Committee Inches Toward Policy Issues

The committee charged with recommending how the Air Resources Board should establish greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets under AB 32 and SB 375 spent much of its first half dozen meetings talking in about the technical details of measuring emissions and modeling for future emissions. That changed on Wednesday, June 3, when Regional Targets Advisory Committee (RTAC) member Richard Katz said he’d had enough.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

California's Green Conundrum Surfaces Near Santa Barbara

There is no better example of the conundrum in which Gov. Schwarzenegger and all Californians find ourselves than the controversial oil drilling deal off Santa Barbara County.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

Redevelopment Litigation Continues Amid State Budget Crisis

The state will appeal a Superior Court decision blocking the state from shifting $350 million of tax increment revenue from redevelopment agencies to schools

In the midst of the state’s larger budget crisis, the amount at issue in the litigation suddenly appears piddling. Still, the case, if pursued, could be important, especially to redevelopment agencies.
» read more | Paul Shigley's blog

Locals Attack SB 375 As Inefficient Way To Go After Climate Change

Even as local officials in Southern California attack the question of how to implement SB 375, they have slyly begun to suggest that the bill isn’t the best way to attack the problem it supposedly addresses – greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. It is not clear what the locals will do with this line of attack, unless they are angling to try to go back to the Legislature to shift the responsibility for GHG emissions reductions away from land use and back toward technological improvements.

» read more | Bill Fulton's blog
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